The mortgages included the debt on Turtle Creek Village, the site of the proposed St. Regis hotel on Cedar Springs Road in Uptown and another development site on North Central Expressway.

Representatives for Lone Star Funds, which invests in a wide range of distressed debt and equity deals, declined to comment on the foreclosures.

Anglo Irish Bank had lent more than $63 million to a New England investor, which owned Turtle Creek Village until the foreclosure. The project includes an 18-story office tower, a six-story office building and connecting retail space built in the 1960s.

The village’s largest office building, constructed in 1972, just got a $7 million makeover. And the previous owner had been working on a remodeling plan for the village.

The 2.5-acre hotel site included in the Lone Star Fund foreclosures had $16 million in debt. Developers canceled plans for the St. Regis hotel tower after the recession hit.

The property is considered one of the most desirable development sites along the Katy Trail.

Three acres in the Lincoln Park development in North Dallas that Lone Star took at foreclosure had previously had $6 million in debt from Anglo Irish Bank. Connecticut-based CommonFund, an investment manager for foundations and pension funds, had been working with the Dublin-based bank to restructure the debt before it was sold to Lone Star for an undisclosed sum.

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